Friday, March 22, 2013

Reunification of Adoption-Separated Persons

When the media has asked me about reunion outcomes I always tell them that just like all other interpersonal relationships, they run the gamut from great to awful and everything in between and many - as we all know - can go back and forth and back again.  Parent and adult child relationships are difficult as is, but add the baggage of feelings of rejection, guilt, feelings of betrayal, loss, shock, anger, feelings of abandonment....and you've got a powder-keg waiting to explode.

When adoptees or parents who have relinquished ask me about reunion I have often said: Expect nothing except to find the truth. Whatever you find, good, bad or indifferent will be your truth.  I also usually remind searchers that they are proceeding at their pace in their time and readiness, but the person they are finding and seeking to enter into a reunion with is totally unprepared and caught off-guard. They often need time to readjust to this new reality.

Recently, a Facebook conversation led to another point of view.  The views expressed by "Buck Wheat" as she is known online, were so thoughtful and insightful, so  important to share that I asked her to write a guest blog post. 

I hope it opens a healthy and helpful discussion.

Here it is:


Reunion and Expectations
by CV

I hear both moms and adoptees say to enter into reunion with no expectations. I believe this is misguided advice. I also believe it is impossible. I cannot count the number of times I have read or heard adoptees and moms say I had no expectations but it isn’t long before I hear them say what they found wasn’t what they expected! Remember, you are entering into reunion because YOU believe you are ready. Expect that there may never be the perfect time for those you find and they may not be ready.

From my experience and research, here is what I believe we can reasonably expect.

We can expect to find a wounded soul. I know it seems obvious but it’s important to remember because we need to be kind, gentle, and compassionate with the trauma survivor. We can expect that there may be some sort of self-medicating for the pain. Be it drugs (prescription or illicit), alcohol, workaholics, or food. It’s natural for humans to self-medicate and we should not condemn or judge them for it.

We can expect that our “other” (I use the term ‘other’ when referring to adoptees or moms. It is for brevity and not intended to diminish anyone) may not be able to face their pain thus unable to acknowledge ours. It isn’t their fault! People are ready to face it at their own pace and we must respect that. Setting an example of facing our own is all we can really do. Tell anyone who isn’t ready that they might have ‘adoption issues’ and you’ll likely be met with rage. Haven’t we all seen someone scream ‘I’m NOT angry’ complete with the red face, vein pulsing in their forehead after you ask them why they are so angry? It is easy to believe they are being self absorbed, don’t care how we are affected, flawed for not being strong enough to see their own let alone our pain but it is simply fear. There is no value, comfort or healing in taking it personally because it isn’t.

We can expect that people don’t understand the difference between feelings, beliefs, and the truth. This certainly isn’t isolated to adoptoworld. Understanding the differences is critical! By far, this is the most important thing I’ve learned in my journey. It made the difference of feeling crushing pain and despair to understanding and compassion.  Feelings and beliefs fluctuate. The truth is constant. Feelings are happy, sad, angry, shame, etc. Feelings are never wrong, they just are. We need to honor, and validate them. Beliefs are a different matter and it is healthy to question them, it isn’t disrespectful. I find myself explaining these differences most often when talking with moms and adoptees about rejection and abandonment. I am very careful to challenge beliefs, not feelings. I challenge those that say ‘I feel rejected. I feel abandoned’. I do that because those aren’t feelings, they are beliefs! I strongly believe that there is no rejection of people in reunion – ever. It is a rejection of the pain, not us.

We can expect that trauma victims may not know what the truth is. Just because our other says something doesn’t make it true. You will be told their beliefs but they could be false and can’t be assumed the truth. This is counter-intuitive, I know. The brainwashing by society and the adoption industry affects us all at some time to some degree. I lied to myself and lived in denial to survive. The fog is very powerful. It wasn’t long ago that I would’ve said I had a choice, that I had no regrets. Those were my false beliefs and not the truth. As with everything with adoption, you can’t take anything at face value and must look deeper.  Does anyone out of the fog really believe the adoptee that says adoption had no affect on me? Do we believe the rape victim that says it was her fault?

We can expect that we, or our other, may unconsciously sabotage our reunion. This can happen when we believe inherently (often unconsciously) that somehow we are unlovable, that we don’t deserve good things in our life, we can’t trust anyone. How can one not have a seed of the belief of being unlovable when the one who was supposed to love them the most left them? Moms tell themselves they are unlovable because what kind of person gets themselves in a position to lose a child to adoption? We may believe we aren’t worthy of a relationship, that they are better off without us. Our misguided belief of ‘rejection’ may terrify us and give us any reason to ditch our other. A get them before they get me defense mechanism. What can be most confusing is that a pullback can come when reunions are going well. It’s the realization of all that we’ve lost and will never get back that can cause some to put the brakes on. Again, it’s the pain being rejected, not the person.

We can expect that reunion will bring grief to the surface. I didn’t start to grieve the loss of my son until after we met face to face. Grief can cause us to lash out at our other or anyone else. It is akin to having psychological sunburn. Things that would not normally hurt, the slightest touch can cause an extreme pain reaction. The grief can seem never ending. I found making a list helped. Putting it down on paper stopped it from being free-floating. It allowed me to give it the respect and acknowledgement it deserved. I don’t hold back the tears anymore. I hope that one day I’ll discover I don’t need to add to the list anymore.

We can expect that social graces we give and receive from those close to us may not apply in adoptoworld. For example, a friend would return your call or email in a day or two. We need to understand that our other may need time to process, may have an uncontrollable urge to prove that you aren’t that important. You see, we convince ourselves that it hurts less when we diminish the value and importance of our other. Another false belief because trying to ignore our pain certainly doesn’t make it go away. We’d all be pain free if that actually worked!

We can expect that if setting healthy boundaries is hard for us it will be exponentially more difficult with our other. We all have the right to be treated with respect and dignity. It is natural for adoption to cause ‘nuclear’ rage and it could be directed to our other instead of the adoption industry where it belongs. It isn’t fair or right but understandable. Moms need to have compassion and patience for their kids that vehemently exclaim that we had a choice; there wasn’t a gun to your head. Expect that the miniscule exception to the rule, the ‘dumpster babies’, women who just don’t want to parent, abortion will be referenced.

We can expect regression. Moms will often regress to the age when they lost their child. I’ve seen my son regress to the contemptuous teenager, raging toddler and then to the kind, contemplative adult in mere moments. I couldn’t believe the youthful energy I had upon reunion. The downside was that some of the immature attitudes came through as well. The world was once again black and white and not the spectrum of gray that comes with experience and maturity. This wasn’t constant but my younger ‘inner child’ would come through when triggered.  I’m grateful I was able to recognize that when my son said he never wanted to see or speak to me again it was his inner child coming through. If I took him at his word, face value, I would have left him alone and it could’ve been decades before we reconnected again, if ever. I followed the advice of a wise adoptee and continued to send my notes of loving and missing you every month or so. After over a year of silence, he has responded. I know there will be mountains and valleys on our path but I will never give up hope!

We can expect that we can’t travel this journey alone. We need the support and compassion of those that are on the same journey and those that have travelled before us. It takes work to know something intellectually and to know it in our bones. I believe it is our responsibility to face our own pain. I believe we have a duty to learn about our other’s experience and pain, too. Above all, we cannot judge and condemn them for not facing their pain or healing on our schedule. We need to accept where they are. We can only change ourselves.

We can expect that our capacity for love, compassion, and empathy can carry us through. “Perfect maturity is when a person hurts you, and you try to understand their situation and don’t hurt them back. – unknown”

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Massive Adoption Fruad

Children removed for REVENGE...orders for children being filled by CPS....incomopetent fosterers allowed to adopt....

ALL FOR FEDERAL BONUS MONEY!!!

A news report EVERY PARENT has to see!!

Make no mistake aboutit, it aint jus' happenin' in Kentucky. It's just being uncovered and reported on there.

Friday, March 1, 2013

Sacrificial Firstborn

A poem of mine from 1969 has been published online at Poets on Adoption.

Sacrifical Firstborn


Firstborn
first begotten one
firstborn of spirit
firstborn of flesh
child that opened my womb

Only one is called
firstborn of many
brethren in spirit
others
firstborn of many
in flesh

And others still,
like the child of Arsinoe,
who died while giving birth to
her firstborn child,
are first and only.

Your firstfruits shall be holy,
saith the Lord,
and shall be dedicated unto me
as a special offering

lamb of God
sacrificial lamb
sacrificed in spirit
scarified in flesh

…and God gave his only begotten son
son born of unwed mother
so that others…

…and God spoke to the Jews
and told them
to sacrifice
their firstborns no more

but God also asked
that atonement be made
so she shall be clean.

and netherworld demons
and peddlers of flesh
in the black-gray
underworld marketplace
seek out
and offer false promises
for a coveted
firstborn child

…and on the 31st day
firstborn sons become
legally
and ritually
The Firstborn.

But sons (like mine)
who follow
in the wake
of ghostly Firstborns
are forever displaced
as firstborn heirs.

Lamb of God
silent sacrificial lamb
sacrificed in spirit
special offering to God
seeking forgiveness
for the sin of your birth
yet taken by God
as a sacrifice in flesh
July, 1998

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Frozen Tears



Eighteen years ago today, Feb. 27, 1995 was the last day of my eldest daughter, Alicia's life.

The following poem was written on the first anniversary of her death and published in the Origins Winter 1996 newsletter.

Frozen Tears

 

The day dawned
bright and clear
the sun shone brightly
warming me
from deep inside
the day in July
when the angels
brought you
into this world
with labor and love.

But the wind gusted
frost chilled my bones
and froze my tears
that bleak day in February
when you left this world
alone.

I'd been crying
for weeks
a month?
asking why
looking for reasons
finding none
feeling painfully alone.

Perhaps I was closer
to knowing you
your pain of abandonment
the sorrow behind
the pretty face
smiling for the camera
was it all a charade?
were you ever happy?

You died alone
all alone
no one there
no one called
no one came

no family
no friends
no kin
no doctors
no nurses 

No rabbis, priest or ministers
no visionaries or seekers of truth
no social workers or judges
where were they all
when you needed them?

No on held your hand
no one comforted you
no one shared you fear
no one spared your pain
 
Cold as ice
I grieve tears
frozen in time

Did you do this
all alone
as an act of defiance
or because
all alone
is how you felt?

Could I have saved you?
if I had kept you?
or did I abandon you
to a life of despair?

------------------------
 
Rest in peace my sweet baby girl and know that you live on in my heart.

Alicia's Facebook memorial page.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Anatomy of a Black Market Adoption

They were young in the 1960's, in their twenties and had been trying for five years to get pregnant when they were told she could never have children.
 
He was a school teacher in a NY suburb. They contacted a group he recalls as The Adoptive Parents League "or something like that."

First he claimed there were no babies available in NY at the time. When I rebuked that, he amended it saying that they were told by this group that NY is a hard place to adopt and that SouthCarolina was more "friendly" to adoptive parents. In New York, it could take years and was very invasive "they looked up your asshole" he said, and in some cases - they knew personally of one - the mother changed her mind and it made for a long ugly legal battle.
 
They were advised to go through a South Carolina attorney named Robert K. Wise with offices in the very “prestigious” Barringer Building in Columbia, SC. He worked with his nephew, Birge Wise who was also an attorney, Wise and Shealey. This firm is linked to several other quick and slip shod adoptions to the New York area.

The young couple engaged in a colorful and notorious "60s lifestyle" behavior that no doubt made avoiding straight-forward adoption agencies and home study. This short-cut "gray market" method suited their "cool" "hip" lifestyle far better than probing busy-body social workers.

Once they contacted Wise, first came a phone call that a beautiful blonde-haired, blue eyed little girl had been born and was "available." They were asked what they wanted to name her and gave the name of the adoptive Mom's mother and flew off to take the little bundle straight from the hospital. No papers signed. Nothing. How they got on a plane with her is anyone's guess.

Two weeks later came another call that a baby boy had been born on Jan 28, 1964. Did they want him? They said yes, gave another name and this time flew to S.C. and were met in their motel room. They were told this child was "from out of state" - maybe Georgia? Who knew, who cared? 

They were told the parents were married, marriage in trouble. Mr. & Mrs Johnson.

I met this family in the early 70s when the little boy and girl were about seven. Two weeks apart in age they were quite the source of conversation in their school and everyone knew they were "adopted." Plain and simple. Two adorable toe-headed kids who grew up like twins and always knew they were "adopted."

Shortly after I met them, the adoptive parents divorced. The wife took off leaving the two kids behind and the father remarried. I told the father that if either of the kids ever wanted to search for their families, I'd help. He was very open to the idea and said he would help them anytime they wanted to.

The two little adopted angels at their a-dad's second wedding.

The father's second marriage produced two natural heirs to the family business (teaching had long one by the wayside) and these two were treated like royalty while the adopted daughter got pregnant by one of her father's biker friends, had an underage marriage and two more kids with him before they divorced. Long story short, she has had a TOUGH life, overcoming many tragedies and hardships.

Flash forward and the adopted son is now an adult and we are friends on Facebook. I ask if he has thought about searching and he said he tried with no success. At his request, I contact his a-dada wh told me he'd help.  He was very open about what occurred and sent me a copy of an amazing letter, written on the legal letterhead of Robert K. Wise, that accompanied the two birth certificates he received three months after the babies were born. It states:

"This adoption is under our new law and if anyone should write you inquiring as to how this adoption was put through without waiting six months, do not answer the letter but forward same to me and I will tell you what to tell them. If anyone should call you over the telephone do not tell them anything but get their address and tell them you will advise them at a later date. Tell them nothing not even the name of your attorneys.


"Trust that both you and the little boy and little girl are doing fine."

The birth certificate is an abomination. It lists place of birth as Richland Co, NY which is in Oswego, no where near the actual birht or adoptive family home.  Did he list the county as Richmond because that's the county in SC his office was in? It then lists the hospital as Columbia in the city of Columbia, which is in SC and home of his office and the hospital where the girl was picked up from, but it lists the hospital location as Merrick (the Long Island, NY residence of the adopters at the time.)

Two doctor's "signatures" are typed in: Ben J. Neeley and as registrar, C.R. Slaon, MD.

This young man will never know the truth of his birth or who his kin are. Does he have siblings, full or half?

Certainly if the mother was in crisis, she received no counseling, nor did she benefit one red cent from the sale of her child. She may have been told her child died.
 
In all likelihood the sleaze bag lawyer Wise had a nurse at Columbia hospital who got few bucks for calling any time there was a mother giving birth with no family around. Then whatever scam they played - either telling young frightened girls afraid to tell their parents that they had a "wonderful' couple to adopt their child, or simply having the child disappear and being told it died.

R.K. Wise and other member sof his firm made a hbit of offering twp-fers and made many double adoptions from D.C. to Brooklyn.

No one the wiser. The lawyer richer. A-dad recalls paying $3500 each in "legal fees"! A real bargain!  They were a happy little family and any qualms they had settled by convincing themselves that an unwanted child, after all got a "good" home with parents who'd love and care for him. All guilt assuaged. Ya' know - "If we didn't take them someone else would have." Alls well that ends well...

Unless the child grown up and needs a vital organ! Hadn’t thought of that had you?

A-dad tells me he has no fear of the young man finding his parents! Why fear the impossible!

Do not for a moment think this is all in the past. Gray and black market adoptions happen every day!  People wanting babies are all to eager to ignore obvious red lights of wrong-doing pay bribes, do whatever is necerssary and keep quiet about it.  It is done domestically and internationally. It is done through attorneys, adoption "facilitators" and even so-called "repuatble" adoption agencies.

As long as there is a demand and people willing to pay and look the other way, there will be baby thieves willing to do whatever it takes to fill the order and collect the fees EAGERLY handed over!
 

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Stigmatize Adoption, Not Adoptees


Adoption stigma, like racism, is alive and well.

For the past 40 years that I have been actively involved in the world of adoption...the only time we heard about adoption being stigmatized was from adoptive parents. They felt that others - often family members - looked at their choice as second best and did not embrace their adopted child as part of the family as they would have a child born into the family - a child who might look familiar, share familial traits or coloring of hair, skin and eyes.

But isn't it also because so many adopters now publically share their adoption "journey's" and how they begin that journey only after years of trying and failing to have a child of their own? No, not ALL adoptions are entered into by those who cannot have children of their own, but MOST are. How is the public to think of adoption as anything but a second best booby prize as long people share the fact that it is IS a consolation prize for them, something they "accepted" as their lot in life after much time, money and emotional agony was spent to avoid it, and many tears were shed.

Adoptive parents also complained that their children have a hard time in school. Some got teased, while other shad difficulty with specific school tasks such as family trees and adopters have worked to change that aspect of school curriculum to "normalize" the status of adoption for their kids. They report negative comments from strangers asking how much their kid cost - again, as a result of so many discussing facts like costs publically. They also dislike being out in public with a child that obviously is a different race and being asked about the child's "real" or natural family.

Now, adults who were adopted are sharing the pain the endured growing up adopted. Authors like Jane Jeong Trenka have addressed eloquently the effects of teasing and taunting they endure especially when raised in lily-white middle-America.

And now a white adoptee shares her feelings of being stigmatized by the fact of having been adopted. Kathy Bright, for instance, writes:

For example, I go to a new doctor and I'm handed a two-page form full of medical history questions. Did my mother or grandmother have a history of breast cancer? Any diabetics in the family? High blood pressure? Heart conditions? Thyroid?

Well, I don't know because I'm a-d-o-p-t-e-d. Where's the checkbox that says "Adopted" or "Don't Know" or "No Family History"? Because I've never seen one. The forms get updated with HIPAA and every other thing, but that part never changes. Why not? On a side note, I have gotten over not having a genetic medical history. (OK, not totally. You get a warranty when you get an appliance, but you can't even get a medical history with a kid? Really?)

But at least give me a real-world option on your forms, especially if we're going to talk about modern families and how we define them. If you can change "mother" and "father" to "first parent" and "second parent," you can certainly add "No Family History" or just "Don't Know."

And what about the plain simple fact that adoptees are treated unequal LEGALLY in most states? Is not inequality the ultimate indication of stigma? As was the case when I grew up, with segregated schools, drinking fountains, etc. that kept Blacks in a separate legal class of their own, so too do current laws that deny adopted persons the same right to their own birth certificates segregate out and discriminate against a portion of the population based on nothing more than a transfer of their custodial rights - a decision had no choice in!

When an adopted woman named Jenessa took to Facebook with a photographic plea for help in locating her family or origins, the story went viral. While she received support, some also felt the need to share their desire to keep this woman imprisoned and disallowed the same rights all other - not adopted - take for granted: the rights to geology, the right to know who you look like and where you get your talents and quirks from...the right as someone recently said to know when your mother began and ended menses...and the right to ask why you were placed for adoption.

She was met with all the stereotypical rhetoric including that she should be GRATEFUL and that it's a "slap in the face" of her adoptive parents for her, as an adult, to have a natural, human curiosity.

Yes, adoption stigma is alive and well, especially toward parents who relinquish - or even consider it.

This comment is typical of many I receive to blog posts at here at FamilyPreservation.blogspot.com:

"My name is Fabi. Im a mother of two beautiful daughters. Just like cara, i was in a horrible situation, a horrible relationship, and didn't have a job. I was pressured into adopting, aborting, ect. No matter how much pressure was put on me i still said f&@@ the world im keeping my baby, i was only 18. Compared to a 28 year old...she made a mistake you dont have a receipt god doesn't have lay away. Cara shouldnt have given her up in the first place. Now she made innocent people pay more her mistake."

Eliminate ALL Stigma?
While we work toward eradicating stigmas that hurts those who have been adopted or have lost a child to adoption, and work towards equality for adoptees…is our goal to eliminate all stigmas surrounding adoption?
NO.  First we need to examine the fact that not all adoptions are equal. Some are altruistic – or truly attempt to be.  Most are a second-best choice.  Far too many adoptions are not in the child’s best interest but rather to meet a demand and thus far too many involve exploitation and coercion. We certainly want all those kinds of adoption to continue to be stigmatized.
In fact, we as a society need to increase the stigma on unnecessary adoptions such as those that export babies from the US or involve openly paying bribes, or those in which adopters turn a blind eye to obvious abuses, inconsistencies, lies and unethical practices. We need in fact to increase  the stigma on practices such as pre-birth matching that puts pressure and feelings of obligation on mothers and false expectations on would-be adopters.  
We need to stigmatize the practice of relinquishing parents relying on those vying for their child to pay their expenses and provide them with an attorney. We need to stigmatize moving expectant mother out-of-state, isolating them and telling them to lie about the father of the child, denying him his rights.
In other words, stigmatize all that is wrong with adoption. Stigmatize the hell out of adopters who abuse or abandon children they have sought out and been entrusted with. And stigmatize like witches  those who hang on to and fight mothers and fathers who are able to parent their own child, or take any child knowing he or she has family that want him, or keep children who are known to have been kidnapped, as the Monahans are doing. Stigmatize all that is EVIL in adoption! 
And let women considering relinquishment read what will be thought and said about them after the fact!  The public WILL stigmatize you for acting against nature and giving away your own flesh and blood no how well thought out and open your adoption. So think well before casting yourself in the lifelong role of pariah, and asking your child to suffer the sting as well. 
Adoption IS second best and it IS unnatural and it should be avoided whenever possible.

Stigmatize adoption, not adoptees or their natural parents.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

KIDFAX

Read What Our Staisfied Customer Have to Say:

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Dear KidFax,
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Thank you.

Thank you KidFax for vetting 3 kids and helping us choose the one that was the best fit for us. Your services were worth every penny.
 

RussiaToday Apr 29, 2010 on Russian Adoption Freeze

Russi Today: America television Interview 4/16/10 Regarding the Return of Artyem, 7, to Russia alone

RT: Russia-America TV Interview 3/10

Korean Birthmothers Protest to End Adoption

Motherhood, Adoption, Surrender, & Loss

Who Am I?

Bitter Winds

Adoption and Truth Video

Adoption Truth

Birthparents Never Forget